idle process keeping cpu 150% busy in freebsd 9.1-amd64
John Baldwin
jhb at freebsd.org
Fri May 31 16:06:23 UTC 2013
On Friday, May 31, 2013 10:47:34 am Kostas Oikonomou wrote:
> Thanks very much for the reply.
>
> Being new to FreeBSD, this still seems weird to me. (My
> background is Solaris.)
>
> On both machines, the core that's running at 150% in the
> case of the HP machine, and at 400% in the case
> of the Dell laptop, is causing the fans to come on. Would
> you call that "idle"? I'm worried that the cores will
> eventually be damaged.
Do you have deeper Cx states enabled? By default FreeBSD will only enter C1.
Try setting 'performance_cx_lowest=LOW' in /etc/rc.conf and either rebooting
or running '/etc/rc.d/power_profile start' to see if that helps. You can see
which Cx states are being used by running 'sysctl dev.cpu | grep cx_'. For
example:
dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1
dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% 0.00% last 324us
dev.cpu.1.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.1.cx_lowest: C1
dev.cpu.1.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% 0.00% last 300us
dev.cpu.2.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.2.cx_lowest: C1
dev.cpu.2.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% 0.00% last 192us
dev.cpu.3.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.3.cx_lowest: C1
dev.cpu.3.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% 0.00% last 157us
This is on a machine with the default setup. After changing it to use the
lowest setting:
dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C3
dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 5.84% 92.86% 1.28% last 145us
dev.cpu.1.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.1.cx_lowest: C3
dev.cpu.1.cx_usage: 0.99% 94.92% 4.08% last 293us
dev.cpu.2.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.2.cx_lowest: C3
dev.cpu.2.cx_usage: 0.45% 88.50% 11.04% last 174us
dev.cpu.3.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/59 C3/93
dev.cpu.3.cx_lowest: C3
dev.cpu.3.cx_usage: 6.40% 86.89% 6.69% last 203us
Another option is to run powerd which will throttle your CPUs down to lower
clock speeds when they are idle. You can enable this by setting
powerd_enable="YES" in /etc/rc.conf and running '/etc/rc.d/powerd start'.
--
John Baldwin
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